Ever wonder why there hasn’t been a place to learn about a wide variety of topics in a fun, helpful, distraction-free environment where learners and teachers can collaborate? A place where teachers can earn some money sharing their expertise on everything from Parkour to Locker Hooking to Spicy Pork? We couldn’t find a place like that, so we built Curious.

In the past year, we built a marketplace, a wonderful way to build and play lessons and (most importantly) a ton of relationships with some really great teachers.

On a personal note, I’m having a blast! We’re building a product and service that I love to use. I’m surrounded by incredibly talented, driven people – like the Lesson Wranglers who scouted, onboarded and edited more than 500 high quality lessons from more than 100 teachers. And it’s a pleasure to be working on something that will help a LOT of people.

Thai and Justin shared their thoughts this morning and I agree with them 100% that this team is astounding and it’s hard to imagine work being any more awesome!

If you want to learn more about what we’re doing check out the NY Times, Techcrunch or the sweet launch video at curious.com. And, of course, go learn something fun!

Preshit Deorukhkar’s Beautiful Pixels blog features apps that look and feel great. Most of the articles are about iOS apps, but Android pops up every now and then. Today marked the first installment of his new weekly feature, The Platter. The Platter points to apps, news, video, etc that he thinks will resonate with the BP audience. Go check it out!

Andrew (bunnie) Huang is a published author, architect of the chumby hardware platform and the father of XBox hacking. His blog is a great source of technical info, but his features on hardware production in China are the real draw.

Terrific post by Don Lehman analyzing the recent parts leaks and iPhone 5 rumors. He covers the rationale of the design choices using 4S and Macbook manufacturing insights. I was excited already about the more video friendly 16:9 screen, but this analysis of the rest of the hardware has me even more intrigued.

For desktops, Apple has 3 form factors (iMac, Mac Mini, Mac Pro). For Notebooks, it has 5 or 6 (Air 11, Air 13, Retina MacBook Pro, MacBook Pro 13, Macbook Pro 15, etc). The iPod is currently available in 3 sizes. For the iPad and the iPhone, Apple currently has one form factor each.

If rumors are true and a taller iPhone and/or an iPad mini are coming in the Fall, that’s pretty big news. Apple will learn a lot about what customers want based on which device they buy, because the existing iPhone and iPad form factors will almost certainly remain in production (the 3GS is 3 years old and still selling strong and you can still buy the iPad 2).

Will we start to see people choosing an older model just because it has a smaller or larger form factor? I expect so.

It’s not exactly uncharted territory for Apple, but it will be interesting to see how they apply their learnings from other multi-form-factor product lines to the iPhone and the iPad. Will this be a transitionary period or will the iPhone and iPad continue to ship in multiple form factors?

Imagine that every app on your iPhone offered up its best features as little blocks that YOU could put together to create the apps YOU need in about the same amount of time it takes you to set a reminder or look up an address. Maybe we’ll see something like this soon!

Application scripting has a long history. The Mac, for instance, has had AppleScript since 1993. Even today, many apps on the Mac (Acorn and Transmit, for instance) make their features available for users to combine with AppleScript to create personalized workflows. Apple kicked it up a notch with Automator in 2005 making it much easier to combine services from a variety of apps. See Sal Soghoian’s site for some great examples of what’s possible – create a tour in Google Earth, convert a bunch of essays into audio files for your commute.

AppleScript isn’t alone. MIT’s Scratch is a graphical programming language with a focus on usability that is now available for Android as Google App Inventor. It shares the Android platform with a few other scripting tools – Locale, for instance, will trigger functionality on your Android phone when a set criteria happens (“Lock my screen when I leave my home or office”, etc). If This Than That has built up an excellent set of scriptable web services giving you the ability to automate the internet (“SMS me AAPL drops below $500”, “When I star items in Google Reader, send them to Instapaper”). If you’ve ever used Outlook’s Inbox Assistant, you probably have an idea of how a simple interface can give you a lot more control of your applications.

So what does this have to do with iOS? If Apple and the iOS developer community embraced scripting, here are some use cases that come to mind:

Alarm + Notification + TuneIn Radio – When it’s time for my favorite radio show to start, notify me with the option to start TuneIn Radio on the correct station.

I’m sure some of these exact recipes are available in a single app, today. The trick or treat example could be achieved with Find My Friends or Glympse, for instance. But scripting would let you customize the ingredients to get exactly what you want.

Apple and the iOS community has been building a lot of bite-sized apps that are highly specialized. Each of these apps has something to offer as a building block in a highly scriptable device. Scripting on iOS (done right) could bring us a more personalized, streamlined and accessible mobile computer.